Secure exchange of information in electronic design automation
Information related to electronic design automation may be exchanged in a secure manner. Information deemed sensitive and otherwise worthy of protection may be secured by methods such as encryption, obfuscation and other security measures. The secured information may be processed without revealing at least some of the secured information. For instance, rule files related to integrated circuit manufacturability may be selectively annotated to indicate portions thereof deserving of protection. An encryption tool may be used to secure the information related to electronic design automation. An electronic design automation tool may then unlock and use the secured information without revealing the same. In one aspect, such access or secure use of the information may depend on one or more conditions being met (e.g., a time period or a number of uses or accesses). For instance, the tool may be a physical verification tool capable of verifying whether any of the one or more integrated circuit layouts may violate one or more of the secured rules.
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This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/895,485 filed Jul. 20, 2004, entitled “Secure Exchange of Information in Electronic Design Automation,” by inventors, John G. Ferguson, Fedor G. Pikus, Kyohei Sakajiri and Laurence W. Grodd, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional application 60/506,190, filed Sep. 26, 2003, entitled “Secure Transfer of Rule Files,” by inventors, John G. Ferguson, Fedor G. Pikus, Kyohei Sakajiri and Laurence W. Grodd, both of which are incorporated by reference herein.
TECHNICAL FIELDThe technical field relates to electronic design automation. More particularly, the field relates to methods of secure exchange of information related to electronic design automation.
BACKGROUNDModern electronic systems including circuits are becoming increasingly complex. Thus, it is not surprising that it may require increasingly specialized skills and capabilities to design and manufacture these complex systems. As these skills and capabilities become more specialized, it may take the cooperative effort of engineers from a number of different entities to complete the engineering required to successfully design and manufacture such electronic systems. It is also possible that, in some cases, one entity will rely upon the specialized skills and capabilities of an outside organization (e.g., vendor) to meet a specific need.
For example, these days it is common for electronic system designers to outsource the manufacturing or assembly of their electronic systems to other businesses that specialize in manufacturing. In these scenarios, entities may need a reliable and secure way for exchanging information related to electronic design automation (EDA) with their partner entities, but still maintain control over how much of their trade secrets, capabilities, skills and the like may be divulged to such partner entities.
In one particular example, a system on chip (SOC) designed by one entity may need to be manufactured by a custom integrated circuit (IC) manufacturer. Foundries associated with these manufacturers usually have constraints (e.g., manufacturing) which may have a bearing over whether a particular IC layout selected by a design engineer can in fact be manufactured by the foundry. These constraints are typically expressed as rules in formats selected for such communication (e.g., Standard Verification Rules Format (SVRF)). A file comprising such rules can be referred to as a rule file. Constraints expressed in a rule file may contain information related to a particular foundry's capabilities, trade secrets and other sensitive information which the foundry may not want revealed to certain parties. However, for example, such information may be useful for designing IC layouts that conform to the rules such that these layouts can be manufactured by the selected foundry.
Thus, there is a need for systems and methods that allow for secure exchange of EDA related information between entities for use in EDA tools such that each entity can control access to information that it considers proprietary (e.g., trade secrets and other confidential information).
SUMMARYDescribed herein are methods and systems for the secure exchange of information related to electronic design automation. In one aspect, information related to electronic design automation may be secured by encryption, password protection, obfuscation and other security measures. In another aspect, information related to electronic design automation may be annotated to indicate portions thereof comprising secured information related to electronic design automation.
In yet another aspect, an electronic design automation tool may receive information related to electronic design automation annotated to indicate secured portions thereof. Upon receiving such information electronic design automation tool may identify those portions of the information comprising secured information related to electronic design automation and unlock the secured information for processing. In one aspect, the electronic design automation tool may process the secured electronic design automation information without revealing at least some of the secured information to unauthorized persons, tools, systems, or otherwise compromise the protection of the secured information.
In another aspect, the secured electronic design automation information may be processed, accessed or otherwise used based on one or more conditions being met such as requesting access during a specified duration or a period. The duration or period may be defined in terms of an expiration date. The expiration date may be in terms of a year, a month, a day of the month and a time of day. The one or more conditions for accessing or otherwise using the secured information may also be specified in terms of a number of accesses or uses of the secured electronic design automation information.
In cases wherein the condition for continued access or use of the secured electronic design automation information depends on a number of previous accesses or uses of such data, the conditions may be enforced in a number of different ways. For instance, in a client-server network a client computer attempting to access or use the secured data may obtain a key needed to access the data from a server location in the network along with data related to previous accesses or uses of the secured electronic design automation information. For instance, data such as number of previous accesses, dates and times of such accesses and identity of those requesting accesses may be provided. The client computer may then use such data to determine whether selected conditions have been met in order to allow accessing, processing or otherwise using the secured electronic design automation information.
In yet another aspect, conditions for accessing, processing or otherwise using the secured electronic design automation information may be specified within a file comprising the secured electronic design automation information. Also, different conditions may be used for different portions of the secured electronic design automation information. Furthermore, conditions may differ based on the identity of a user.
In another aspect, information related to electronic design automation may be secured by encryption methods using one or more keys. Information related to keys used for securing information may be exchanged between parties privately or publicly. In one aspect, an individual or party that secured or is providing the secured information related to electronic design automation may share key related information along with the secured information. The electronic design automation tool may then use the key related information to unlock the secured information for processing. In another aspect, a password along with a key may be used for securing information related to electronic design automation. The key, password or other security mechanisms may also be user specified. Such security measures may also be selected by the encryption tool, the electronic design automation tool or some other tool.
In one aspect, an electronic design automation tool may process electronic design automation related information in a secure manner and may also secure at least some of the results of such processing. Such secured results may be provided to other electronic design automation tools for further processing without revealing at least some of the secured results. Also one tool may unlock at least some of the secured electronic design automation related information, process the information and the pass at least some of the information onto another electronic design automation tool for further processing. In another embodiment, the first electronic design automation tool may secure at least some of the electronic design automation related information again prior to transferring it onto to another electronic design automation tool for further processing.
In yet another aspect, the secured information related to electronic design automation comprises rules related to manufacturability of integrated circuits. In one aspect, selected portions of such rules may be secured and provided to an electronic design automation tool, such as a physical verification tool, which can use the rules to verify whether they may be violated by one or more integrated circuit layouts related to a system design. The physical verification tools may then provide information related to the evaluation to users of the tool or to other tools without disclosing at least some of the rules that have been selected for protection.
Additional features and advantages will become apparent from the following detailed description of illustrated embodiments, which proceeds with reference to accompanying drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
The disclosed invention includes all novel and unobvious features and aspects of the embodiments of the system and methods described herein both alone in various combinations and sub-combinations thereof. The disclosed features and aspects of the embodiments can be used alone or in various novel and unobvious combinations and sub-combinations with one another.
Although the operations of the disclosed methods are described in a particular, sequential order for convenient presentation, it should be understood that this manner of description encompasses rearrangements, unless a particular ordering is required by specific language set forth below. For example, operations described sequentially may in some cases be rearranged or performed concurrently. Moreover, for the sake of simplicity, the disclosed flow charts and block diagrams typically do not show the various ways in which particular methods can be used in conjunction with other methods. Additionally, the detailed description sometimes uses terms like “determine” to describe the disclosed methods. Such terms are high-level abstractions of the actual operations that are performed. The actual operations that correspond to these terms will vary depending on the particular implementation and are readily discernible by one of ordinary skill in the art.
Some of the methods described herein can be implemented in software stored on a computer-readable medium and executed on a computer. Some of the disclosed methods, for example, can be implemented as part of an electronic design automation (EDA) tool. Such methods can be executed on a single computer or a networked computer. For clarity, only those aspects of the software germane to these disclosed methods are described; product details well known in the art are omitted. For the same reason, the computer hardware is not described in detail.
Exemplary Overall Systems for Exchanging EDA Related Information in a Secure Manner
In one embodiment, the EDA results 150 may also be provided to a user in a format that does not reveal EDA related information designated to be proprietary or otherwise deserving of protection. For instance, results 150 that may otherwise reveal secured information may just be listed as “Encrypted” or as some other indicator of its protected status. Thus, the EDA tool 140 may secure selected portions of the results 150 to avoid revealing secured information. Also, results that may otherwise reveal secured information may be shared in a limited manner such as listing rule errors in a particular IC layout without revealing the particulars about the rules that were violated by the IC layout.
In this manner, an EDA related document (e.g., 110) comprising intellectual property (IP) may be created by an engineer of one entity and can be shared with engineers of other entities for their use in an EDA tool 140 without having to reveal any sensitive information within the EDA document 110.
Exemplary Overall Methods of Securing an EDA Related Document
In one embodiment, these instructions may be part of the EDA related document (e.g., 110) itself. For instance, an EDA related document (e.g., 110) itself may be annotated with instructions that indicate portions of the document that are to be secured. Thus, at 230, the security tool (e.g., 120) may secure only portions of the EDA related document (e.g., 110) designated for protection according to the instructions. Alternatively, the instructions related to securing the EDA related information may also be separate from the EDA related document itself (e.g., 110) and thus, may be received by the security tool 120 separately. Also, the instruction may not be received from outside the security tool 120. Instead, the instructions may originate from the security tool 120.
Exemplary Methods of Processing Secured EDA Related Information by an EDA Tool
In one embodiment, access to portions of the secured EDA related document (e.g., 130) may be dependent on one or more selected conditions being met. For instance, the EDA tool (e.g., 140) may unlock and use the encrypted or otherwise secured EDA related information (e.g., 130) up to a specified duration in time (e.g., specified as a date and/or a time of date). Conditions to be met for access may also be specified in terms of a specific number of accesses, which may or may not be related to a time period. Data related to the number of previous accesses or other uses, the date and time of such accesses or other uses, identity of those that accomplished such accesses or other uses and other such related data may be maintained by the EDA tool (e.g., 140) or maintained and provided by another computer connected to the EDA tool via a computer network. In case of a networked EDA tool, a key for unlocking the encrypted or otherwise secured EDA related information (e.g., 130) may also be provided by via the network.
Also, different conditions may be required for accessing different portions of the secured EDA related information (e.g., 130). Also, conditions required for accessing different portions of the secured EDA related information (e.g., 130) may be different for different users of the EDA tool (e.g., 140).
At 340, the EDA tool (e.g., 140) may process the now unlocked EDA related information and at 350, provide a user with results of the processing in a manner so as to not reveal any sensitive portions of the EDA related information (e.g., any portion of the secured information that is to be concealed from the user of the EDA tool).
The decrypted or otherwise unlocked EDA related information may be passed on to other EDA tools for further processing and generating other results without revealing sensitive EDA related information. The information that is secured when transferring from one tool to another may be the same information that was initially secured or may be a subset or a super set of such information. Additionally, one EDA tool (e.g., 140 of
In one embodiment no such explicit indicators are used. For instance, portions of the EDA related document or electronic file to be secured may be determined based on whether the portions relate to a header, a body or some other selected portion of the file. For instance, the body may be secured whereas the header may not be secured. Furthermore, a user, or a tool may indicate that data related to selected subjects such as netlists, design rule checking (DRC), optical, process correction (OPC) and other suitable EDA information should be secured. For decrypting or otherwise unlocking secured information, a system may presume, for example, that all illegible data in a secured file should be decrypted or otherwise unlocked.
Exemplary Methods for SecuringSeveral methods may be used for securing information within EDA related documents. For instance, encryption is one such method. For encryption, a block cipher method such as, advanced encryption standard (AES) can be used by an encryption tool. Alternative encryption methods can include the Rivest, Shamir, and Adelman (RSA) encryption, Data Encryption Standard (DES), simple dictionary key permutation, or other suitable encryption methods. However, the securing of the portion of the EDA related document is not limited to encryption. For example, the portion to be secured can be further or alternatively secured through other suitable securing including obfuscation and/or one-way hashing.
Exemplary Uses of Keys in the Process of Securing EDA Related Information
In one embodiment, the exchange of the key 420 may be a public key exchange. For instance, a third party may be used to broker the exchange of key related information. The exchange of the key 420 may also be a private exchange.
The key 530 may be specified by a user of the encryption tool 520. Alternatively, a key may be randomly selected by the encryption tool 520. The encryption tool 520 may select the key 530 from an array of master keys to which it has access. Alternatively, the EDA tool 550 may match the key related information 531 to one or more keys in an array of master keys for unlocking a secured EDA document 535.
Exemplary Uses of Keys along with Passwords for Securing EDA Related Information Alternatively, as shown in
Alternatively, a password 640 may be used to encrypt, obfuscate, protect, or otherwise alter the key related information 651 embedded along with the encrypted EDA related information 650. Then, the EDA tool 660 may require that a user of the EDA tool 660 provide it with the password 665 before attempting to decrypt the key related information 651 embedded along with the EDA information. Also, a key itself may be encrypted, obfuscated, or otherwise protected by a password 640.
An Exemplary Method for Specifying One or More Conditions for Allowing the Use of Secured EDA Related Information As described above, secured EDA related information (e.g., 130 in
In one example, such condition data 532 may be provided to an EDA tool (e.g., 550) along with the secured EDA related information 540. For instance, in a client-server network the EDA tool (e.g., 550) may request and receive such condition data 532 (e.g., a number of allowed accesses, a number of previous accesses, identity data of those that are to be allowed accesses and date and time of previous accesses) from one or more computers connected to the network. In one embodiment of the client-server network, the EDA tool (e.g., 550) may be a client and the network computer responsive to its call back requests may be a server computer capable of providing data in response to requests from one or more such clients.
Alternatively, at least some of the condition data 532 (e.g., a previous access count and date and time of such accesses) may be calculated and maintained locally by the EDA tool 550. Regardless of the source of such condition data 532, the EDA tool may access (e.g., via decryption using the key 530) the secured EDA information 540 upon verifying that the conditions 532 have been met. As noted above, in another alternative, a confirmation of whether the one or more conditions for accesses or other uses have been met may be provided to the EDA tool 550 from another computer of a client-server network. Furthermore, the EDA tool (e.g., 550) may receive a key for unlocking the secured data along with the confirmation that the one or more conditions for access have been met.
For instance, if the one or more conditions 532 relate to accessing the secured EDA information 540 prior to a specified expiration date, then the EDA tool (e.g., 550) may verify a current date (e.g., a date on which a current access is being requested), compare the expiration date (e.g., provided as condition data 532) to the current date and access the secured EDA information 540 if the current date is earlier or the same as the expiration date (e.g., as specified at 532). Alternatively, the access may be limited even on the day coinciding with the expiration date. The expiration date may be specified in terms of one or more of a year, a month, a day of the month and a time of day.
In a further example, conditions for access 532 may not relate to a date but instead a maximum number of accesses to the secured data 540 to be attained via the key 530. For instance, a condition 532 may specify that the EDA tool 550 may access the secured data if such data has not been accessed more than a maximum number (e.g., 10) of times using the key 530. Additionally, the conditions 532 for access may be a combination of a maximum number of allowed accesses and an expiration date. Also, access to different portions of the secured EDA related information 540 may depend on different conditions being met. For instance, different portions of the data may be accessible during different time periods. Also, different conditions 532 may be specified for different users of the EDA tool 550.
In another alternative, the verification of whether conditions have been met for access may be accomplished by a server computer in a client-server network. The results of the verification may be provided to the EDA tool (e.g., 550) for further processing.
Additionally, in one embodiment, it may not be the access to the secured EDA related information 540 that is restricted based on meeting selected conditions 532, instead conditions 532 may be used to restrict the EDA tool 550 from processing or otherwise using, the secured EDA data 540 to generate or to release the results 560 of processing such data.
An Exemplary Method of Encrypting EDA Related Information in Files Referred to Within an EDA Related Document In some instances, EDA related documents may refer to or otherwise rely on information included in another file. For instance, as shown in
One particular application of methods described above for secure exchange of EDA related information between entities may involve the exchange of such information for determining the manufacturability of certain IC layouts based on constraints of a particular manufacturer (e.g., a foundry).
In the illustrated embodiment, the physical verification tool 830 may read the initial IC layout 840 and, using the rule file 820, determine if the initial IC layout 840 violates any of the constraints in the rule file 820. The physical verification tool 830 may provide a results file 850 containing a record of any errors encountered in the layout, as well as information regarding the operation of the tool itself (e.g., the amount of time or memory needed for the tool to run its verification). The physical verification tool 830 may also provide a manufacturable IC layout 860 (e.g., a layout in which no constraints are violated) that the design engineer can choose to use or evaluate for manufacture of the IC. If the initial IC layout 840 does not violate any of the constraints, the manufacturable IC layout 860 may just comprise the initial IC layout 840. If the initial IC layout 840 violates at least one constraint, however, the manufacturable IC layout 860 may comprise proposed changes that would make the layout manufacturable.
However, a manufacturer may desire not to reveal a given rule file (e.g., the rule file 820) containing proprietary information considered to be intellectual property (e.g., one or more trade secrets). This may be so because sometimes, for example, the person who writes the rule file 820 is not the same person who runs the physical verification tool 830 that uses the rule file 820 (e.g., the design engineer). Nonetheless, it is often desirable for the manufacturer to provide the engineer with something detailing at least some of the constraints specific to that manufacturer so that a design engineer may determine whether a given IC layout is manufacturable by that manufacturer even if the entire rule file is not revealed.
As described above, the portion of the rule file 910 comprising such highly proprietary information, or any one or more sections of the file sought to be secured, can be placed between a first set of designated key words in the rule file 910. For example, in one particular embodiment, such key words can be “#ENCRYPT,” signifying the beginning of a section to be secured, and “#ENDCRYPT,” signifying the end of the section to be secured. The modified rule file 910 can then be processed by an encryption tool 920. The encryption tool 920 can secure the portion of the file between “#ENCRYPT” and “#ENDCRYPT” through an encryption process, resulting in an encrypted rule file 930. In one embodiment, the encrypted rule file 930 contains the encrypted portion between a second set of designated keywords, such as “#DECRYPT” and “#ENDCRYPT,” respectively. Other non-encrypted information is desirably also included in the rule file 910, in which case the encrypted rule file 930 is only partially encrypted.
In this embodiment, an optional key 915 is used in the encryption process. The optional key 915 can be a private key, for example. In one particular embodiment, a user selects a key 915 to be used in the encryption process. In an alternative embodiment, a key 915 is randomly selected by the encryption tool 920. The encryption tool 920 can contain or have access to an array of master keys from which it might select a key 915 to use. Alternatively, a user can choose a password to be used in place of or in connection with a key 915. Such a password can be embedded into the encrypted portion of the file at 935 and protected through obfuscation, for example. Alternatively, the password can be used to alter the master key.
The encrypted or partially encrypted rule file 935 can be provided as input, along with the initial IC layout 940, to the physical verification tool 950 for processing. In one embodiment, the physical verification tool 950 decrypts and processes the section or sections 935 of the encrypted rule file 930 between the second set of designated keywords (e.g., “#DECRYPT” and “#ENDCRYPT”) without fully revealing the decrypted section to the user of the physical verification tool 950. The decryption can be done in the run-time memory space of the physical verification tool 950, for example.
Exemplary Methods for Protecting EDA Information Included in the Results of Processing by EDA Tools Referring to
The physical verification tool 950 can provide other EDA related information as results 960 and, if possible, may optionally provide a manufacturable IC layout 970. Such information can further or alternatively be recorded in a database. Error information related to violations of the constraints in the rule file 910 can be communicated in various ways. In one particular embodiment, error information regarding the secured portion of the rule file 935 is handled differently than error information regarding the rest of the file. For example, error information regarding the secured portion of the file 935 can be limited, whereas error information regarding the rest of the file can be much more detailed. In one embodiment, the error information regarding the secured portion of the rule file 935 simply states how many errors exist in the initial IC layout 940.
For example, an otherwise listed rule might simply be shown as “Encrypted” in the results file 960. In another embodiment, the error information regarding the secured portion describes at least one type of error in general terms, such as indicating that two components are too close together, for example. In an alternative embodiment, the error information regarding the secured portion describes at least one type of error in specific terms, such as detailing which two components are too close together and at what location, for example.
Exemplary EDA Tools and EDA Related Information Some of the examples above (e.g.,
EDA related information to be secured and processed in a secure manner may include any information related to design for manufacture (DFM) processes, methods, systems and tools. Also, besides rule files, other EDA related information that can be protected using the disclosed principles include (but are not limited to) Oasis, Spice net lists, VHDL, and Verilog. The processes, methods, systems, tools described herein are not limited in any way by the nature of the information to be secured and processed or the tools for the same.
Exemplary Implementation in a Distributed Network Environment Any of the aspects of the technology described above may be performed or designed using a distributed computer network.
In process block 1154, the EDA related information is processed according to any of the disclosed embodiments. In process block 1156, the server computer sends the results (e.g., errors related to rule files and alternative IC design layouts that so not violate selected rules) to the client computer which receives the database in process block 1158. It should be apparent to those skilled in the art that the example shown in
Having described and illustrated the principles of our invention with reference to the illustrated embodiments, it will be recognized that the illustrated embodiments can be modified in arrangement and detail without departing from such principles. For example, a file may comprise a master file in which multiple, individually protected files comprising EDA related information are included. Thus, for instance multiple IC manufacturers or other third-party entities in the design flow can contribute, use, and/or share rule files without revealing certain proprietary information.
Elements of the illustrated embodiment shown in software may be implemented in hardware and vice versa. Also, the technologies from any example can be combined with the technologies described in any one or more of the other examples. Thus, for instance, any method, process, system or tool described herein with respect to secure processing of rule files for physical verification may be used in conjunction with other EDA related information for other EDA uses in other EDA related tools. In view of the many possible embodiments to which the principles of the invention may be applied, it should be recognized that the illustrated embodiments are examples of the invention and should not be taken as a limitation on the scope of the invention. For instance, various components of systems and tools described herein may be combined in function and use. We therefore claim as our invention all subject matter that comes within the scope and spirit of these claims.
Claims
1. A method of processing secured electronic design automation information by an electronic design automation tool, the method comprising:
- receiving the secured electronic design automation information;
- determining whether at least one condition for accessing at least some portion of the secured electronic design automation information is met;
- accessing the secured electronic design automation information; and
- processing at least some of the secured electronic design automation information without revealing at least some portion of the secured electronic design automation information.
2. The method of claim 1, further comprising receiving data related to the at least one condition for accessing the at least some portion of the secured electronic design automation information along with the secured electronic design automation information.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the at least one condition for accessing the secured electronic design automation information comprises an expiration date and determining whether the at least one condition is met comprises comparing a current date with the expiration date.
4. The method of claim 3, wherein the expiration date comprises one or more of a month data, a year data and a time of day data.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein the at least one condition for accessing the secured electronic design automation information comprises a value corresponding to a maximum number of times the secured electronic design automation information can be accessed and determining whether the at least one condition is met comprises comparing a number value of a current access to the maximum number of times the secured electronic design automation information can be accessed.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein the at least one condition for accessing the secured electronic design automation information comprises a value corresponding to a maximum number of times the secured electronic design automation information can be accessed and determining whether the at least one condition is met comprises generating a call back request to a server computer requesting confirmation that the at least one condition has been met.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein determining whether the at least one condition is met comprises applying different conditions for accessing different portions of the secured electronic design automation information.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein determining whether the at least one condition is met comprises applying different conditions are applied for different users for accessing the at least some portion of the secured electronic design automation information.
9. The method of claim 1, wherein the electronic design automation tool is a physical verification tool and the secured electronic design automation information comprises rules related to manufacture of integrated circuits.
10. The method of claim 1, further comprising receiving information related to a key for accessing the secured electronic design automation information along with data related to the at least one condition for accessing the at least some portion of the secured electronic design automation information.
11. A method for secure exchange of rules related to manufacture of integrated circuits, the method comprising:
- annotating the rules related to manufacture of integrated circuits to select portions thereof to be secured;
- securing the portions of the rules selected to be secured to generate secured rules related to manufacture of integrated circuits;
- annotating the rules related to manufacture of integrated circuits to indicate portions comprising the secured rules related to manufacture of integrated circuits;
- determining whether a current period is within a duration during which the secured rules related to manufacture of integrated circuits may be processed;
- unlocking the secured rules related to manufacture of integrated circuits;
- receiving data related to one or more integrated circuit layouts;
- verifying whether the one or more integrated circuit layouts violate any of the rules related to manufacture of integrated circuits; and
- providing error reports indicating results of the verification without revealing at least some of the secured rules.
12. The method of claim 11, wherein the duration during which the secured rules related to manufacture of integrated circuits may be processed comprises an expiration date.
13. The method of claim 12, wherein the expiration date comprises one or more of a month data, a year data and a time of day data.
14. The method of claim 11, wherein the secured rules related to manufacture of integrated circuits is unlocked but not processed until determining that the current period is within the duration during which the secured rules related to manufacture of integrated circuits may be processed.
15. The method of claim 11, wherein the secured rules related to manufacture of integrated circuits is not unlocked until determining that the current period is within the duration during which the secured rules related to manufacture of integrated circuits may be processed.
16. The method of claim 11, wherein the duration during which the secured rules related to manufacture of integrated circuits may be processed is different for different portions of the secured rules related to manufacture of integrated circuits.
17. The method of claim 11, wherein the duration during which the secured rules related to manufacture of integrated circuits may be processed is different for different users.
18. A system for secured exchange of electronic design automation information comprising an electronic design automation tool operational for:
- receiving a file comprising secured electronic design automation information;
- identifying the secured electronic design automation information within the file;
- determining whether one or more conditions for accessing at least some portion of the secured electronic design automation information within the file have been met; and
- accessing the at least some portion of the secured electronic design automation information to process the at least some portion of the secured electronic design automation information without revealing the at least some portion of the secured electronic design automation information.
19. The method of claim 18, wherein data related to the one or more conditions for accessing the at least some portion of the secured electronic design automation information is specified within the file comprising the secured electronic design automation information.
20. The system of claim 18 further comprising:
- a server computer operational for providing the electronic design automation tool with one or more keys for accessing the at least some portion of the secured electronic design automation information; and
- in response to a call back request from the electronic design automation tool, providing the electronic design automation tool with data confirming whether the one or more conditions for accessing the at least some portion of the secured electronic design automation information have been met.
Type: Application
Filed: Aug 17, 2004
Publication Date: Mar 31, 2005
Patent Grant number: 7353468
Applicant:
Inventors: John Ferguson (Tualatin, OR), Fedor Pikus (Beaverton, OR), Kyohei Sakajiri (Portland, OR), Laurence Grodd (Portland, OR)
Application Number: 10/920,988